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Chapter 36: World War II. The Home Front Selective Service Act: – Men ages 18 – 65 had to register War Productions Board: – ½ of factory production went.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 36: World War II. The Home Front Selective Service Act: – Men ages 18 – 65 had to register War Productions Board: – ½ of factory production went."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 36: World War II

2 The Home Front Selective Service Act: – Men ages 18 – 65 had to register War Productions Board: – ½ of factory production went to war effort Funding of World War II – Increased taxes – War Bonds

3 World War II and Women Women in the military: – WACs (Women’s Army Corps) – WAVES (Women Appointed for voluntary Emergency Service) “Rosie the Riveter”: – Some women moved to new communities to work in aircraft, munitions, and automobile industries. – Propaganda urged women to work in industry – Films characterized “Rosie” as a heroine

4 World War II and African Americans Nearly one million African Americans served in segregated units – Tuskegee Airmen: first African American aviators in the U.S. Army Double V Campaign: – Victory abroad and victory at home (civil rights)

5 World War II and Native Americans Navajo volunteers were used as “code talkers” Japan unable to crack their language used for military communication

6 World War II and Mexican-Americans Bracero Program – 1942, need for farm labor led to U.S. gov’t issuing short-term work permits to Mexican workers – About 150,000 Braceros worked in agriculture and the railroads. Zoot Suit Riots (L.A.), 1943 – Young Mexican-Americans became the object of frequent violent attacks by white sailors and marines. – In June, riots broke out in East L.A. – 150 were injured; 500 Mexican Americas arrested

7 The Home Front: Japanese - Americans Executive Order 9006 – Relocation of Japanese Americans on West Coast to internment camps Korematsu v. US (1944) – Supreme Court upheld internment camps for Japanese Americans Significance? – During times of war, individual rights go DOWN!

8 The Atomic Bomb Manhattan Project: – Headed by J. Robert Oppenheimer Trinity Test: – July 16, 1945 Hiroshima and Nagasaki: – August 6 and 9, 1945 Why did the US use the bombs on Japan? – To save American lives – To demonstrate power to the Soviet Union – Revenge for Pearl Harbor – Belief that Japanese would fight to the last man

9 Key Conferences During the War Tehran Conference (1943) – First meeting of Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin – Stalin wanted control of Eastern Europe and a divided Germany – Churchill wanted a free Eastern Europe Yalta Conference (1945) – Big Three meet again – Discuss plans for postwar Europe – Stalin agreed to free elections – Division of Germany into 4 zones Potsdam Conference (1945) – Demanded unconditional surrender of Japan

10 Impact of the War End to the Great Depression Post-war economic boom (1950s) Demographic shifts – “Baby boom” – Growth of the “sunbelt” – African Americans move north End of Isolation Beginning of the Cold War


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